Obama and the Decline of the American Civil Liberties Movement

Below is today’s column in The Los Angeles Times on the record of Barack Obama on civil liberties and his impact on the civil liberties movement in the United States.

OBAMA: A DISASTER FOR CIVIL LIBERTIES

With the 2012 presidential election before us, the country is again caught up in debating national security issues, our ongoing wars and the threat of terrorism. There is one related subject, however, that is rarely mentioned: civil liberties.

Protecting individual rights and liberties — apart from the right to be tax-free — seems barely relevant to candidates or voters. One man is primarily responsible for the disappearance of civil liberties from the national debate, and he is Barack Obama. While many are reluctant to admit it, Obama has proved a disaster not just for specific civil liberties but the civil liberties cause in the United States.

Civil libertarians have long had a dysfunctional relationship with the Democratic Party, which treats them as a captive voting bloc with nowhere else to turn in elections. Not even this history, however, prepared civil libertarians for Obama. After the George W. Bush years, they were ready to fight to regain ground lost after Sept. 11. Historically, this country has tended to correct periods of heightened police powers with a pendulum swing back toward greater individual rights. Many were questioning the extreme measures taken by the Bush administration, especially after the disclosure of abuses and illegalities. Candidate Obama capitalized on this swing and portrayed himself as the champion of civil liberties.

However, President Obama not only retained the controversial Bush policies, he expanded on them. The earliest, and most startling, move came quickly. Soon after his election, various military and political figures reported that Obama reportedly promised Bush officials in private that no one would be investigated or prosecuted for torture. In his first year, Obama made good on that promise, announcing that no CIA employee would be prosecuted for torture. Later, his administration refused to prosecute any of the Bush officials responsible for ordering or justifying the program and embraced the “just following orders” defense for other officials, the very defense rejected by the United States at the Nuremberg trials after World War II.

Obama failed to close Guantanamo Bay as promised. He continued warrantless surveillance and military tribunals that denied defendants basic rights. He asserted the right to kill U.S. citizens he views as terrorists. His administration has fought to block dozens of public-interest lawsuits challenging privacy violations and presidential abuses.

But perhaps the biggest blow to civil liberties is what he has done to the movement itself. It has quieted to a whisper, muted by the power of Obama’s personality and his symbolic importance as the first black president as well as the liberal who replaced Bush. Indeed, only a few days after he took office, the Nobel committee awarded him the Nobel Peace Prize without his having a single accomplishment to his credit beyond being elected. Many Democrats were, and remain, enraptured.

It’s almost a classic case of the Stockholm syndrome, in which a hostage bonds with his captor despite the obvious threat to his existence. Even though many Democrats admit in private that they are shocked by Obama’s position on civil liberties, they are incapable of opposing him. Some insist that they are simply motivated by realism: A Republican would be worse. However, realism alone cannot explain the utter absence of a push for an alternative Democratic candidate or organized opposition to Obama’s policies on civil liberties in Congress during his term. It looks more like a cult of personality. Obama’s policies have become secondary to his persona.

Ironically, had Obama been defeated in 2008, it is likely that an alliance for civil liberties might have coalesced and effectively fought the government’s burgeoning police powers. A Gallup poll released this week shows 49% of Americans, a record since the poll began asking this question in 2003, believe that “the federal government poses an immediate threat to individuals’ rights and freedoms.” Yet the Obama administration long ago made a cynical calculation that it already had such voters in the bag and tacked to the right on this issue to show Obama was not “soft” on terror. He assumed that, yet again, civil libertarians might grumble and gripe but, come election day, they would not dare stay home.

This calculation may be wrong. Obama may have flown by the fail-safe line, especially when it comes to waterboarding. For many civil libertarians, it will be virtually impossible to vote for someone who has flagrantly ignored the Convention Against Torture or its underlying Nuremberg Principles. As Obama and Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. have admitted, waterboarding is clearly torture and has been long defined as such by both international and U.S. courts. It is not only a crime but a war crime. By blocking the investigation and prosecution of those responsible for torture, Obama violated international law and reinforced other countries in refusing investigation of their own alleged war crimes. The administration magnified the damage by blocking efforts of other countries like Spain from investigating our alleged war crimes. In this process, his administration shredded principles on the accountability of government officials and lawyers facilitating war crimes and further destroyed the credibility of the U.S. in objecting to civil liberties abuses abroad.

In time, the election of Barack Obama may stand as one of the single most devastating events in our history for civil liberties. Now the president has begun campaigning for a second term. He will again be selling himself more than his policies, but he is likely to find many civil libertarians who simply are not buying.

Jonathan Turley is a professor of law at George Washington University.

The Los Angeles Times
September 29, 2011

210 thoughts on “Obama and the Decline of the American Civil Liberties Movement”

  1. Blouise,

    I would and will trade you….I have been doing fall clean up and finally finished erecting the fence….Hope you had fun…I am exhausted…

    I see where or read Cheney thinks Obama should apologize to Bush about the what he said about the war….Now if he’d just keep his campaign promises…maybe he’d have some credibility….

  2. SwM,

    You have my sympathies living down there in a state that only protests last suppers for those on death row. I was at an organizing meeting today and learned that we have our own Wall Street protesting group going in Cleveland.

    Fun times.

  3. HenMan, I am shouting against the tea party. Wish someone had shouted louder in 2010. We might still have Russ Feingold. Everyone is waiting for the messiah Chris Christie. Even Herman Cain is afraid of Rick Perry now after he heard about what was in that article I posted above. The election is over a year away so who knows what could happen.

  4. Swarthmore Mom-

    Werner von Braun was a techno fascist. I don’t believe that Bernie Sanders ever aimed a V2 rocket at the moon and hit London by mistake like WvB did. And it didn’t just happen once.

    Actually, Bernie Sanders is a Socialist. Obama is the techno fascist. But he’s a waffling techno fascist who will compromise if you glare at him.

    SwM- We can’t vote a straight party ticket in Wisconsin anymore. The Republicans thought that might cause voter fraud, or Democrats winning elections, or something. So they made it illegal.

    P.S. I still luv ya, even though you keep shouting “Fire” in a crowded theater. When Obama turns Social Security over to Goldman Sachs and Medicare over to United Healthcare, I promise not to say “I told you so”……..(more than 100 times).

  5. My name is Fear, I induce or ridicule people by using a tactic which is known as fear mongering or scaremongering. I like to get people to think the way I do and use this type of emotional manipulation to to cause fear in people that don’t think like I do. I do not want them to act any different than what I think. I use fear and set up people so that I can ridicule them for acting different than I think they should. I will exaggerate my point in order to induce action. I will repeat it over and over until I feel that I have made my point. I will attack anyone that disagrees with me and show them the error of their way. My name is Fear, and I am here. You may know me by another name.

  6. http://www.texastribune.org/texas-politics/texas-house-of-representatives/olbermann-on-the-new-texas-house-supermajority/ Keith Olberman called Texas a “wholly owned subsidiary of the tea party”. It has not worked out well. The lesser of two evil argument does not work in Texas. Wish I had my old kinda blue dog rep, Martin Frost, back instead of Tea Party leader Pete Sessions. Once they get in they don’t leave. They rig the rules. Thanks again, Tom DeLay.

  7. Henman, You write in Bernie. I like him a lot but Jane Hampshire of FDL was tweeting about him being a “techno fascist disguised as a liberal”. However, I am sticking with my Planned Parenthood and union friends and voting a straight democratic ticket. We don’t get the union sample ballot that I used to distribute when I lived up north. The repubs will sweep here, and if I want to do campaign work I will work in Colorado. Texas is a one party state, and it is pretty darn evil for working people. Things did not get better here when the republicans achieved a super majority.Ask any teacher.

  8. Henman,

    The Forrest does not hear you…nor am i sure that it is capable of understanding either…

  9. Swarthmore Mom-

    You just shouted “Fire!” again.

    As FDR said, “…the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.”

    The “lesser of two evils” theory doesn’t get us there- it just prolongs the evil.

  10. Henman,

    Regardless of who is elected president….based upon the current ones disposition…it won’t really matter…the law and order that one would expect from the one expected to uphold it is a dismissal prospect at best….You say Bernie Sanders….

  11. Henman, I respect your principled position, but i just can’t bear the idea of the tea party republicans having control of the presidency,congress and the supreme court. I think it could very likely happen.

  12. HenMan,

    Copy that…..or is it….Roger that….

    Now as I understand it you run around with Bobcats…..so you should be looked to with askance…..really….But then again….Bobcats under each arms….in the mid west….may just be like truffles in the UP…..

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